Archive for the ‘Content Management’ Category

User Interface Design – Information Design – Search Design

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Google has confirmed what academics have claimed with mixed success for centuries, “Information is gold.” But, how do we access the gold?

Google has kind of answered that question too; you google it. But, what do you get in the data return. “Mary Kay Smith” returns 2,160,000 records, most of the top ones being from services offering to help you find your own Mary Kay. Maybe this is a good start when on the open Internet, but what if Mary Kay Smith works in the Kansas City branch of your company, even with some filtering words like, Kansas City and your company’s name, the return is still going to be front-loaded with helpful services.

This type of search is called a “Free Word” search. It has exception value. Most of us use it more than daily. But, it is not the only way to search and it is often not the appropriate way.

Assuming your company has an employee database you could use an in-house search tool, maybe still a Free Word search tool accessing just that one database. The return would show you all the Mary Kays in your company. Assuming only a few, you quickly click the one showing the KC address and there is her phone and fax number.

We could save a click. Why not have a drop-down list of all the employees? Let’s assume a few thousand. Yeah, the drop-down is too long. So maybe we have instead two “controls”. One is a radio button set asking “First Name” or “Last Name”. The other is an alphabet list. So now we get all the Matts, Marys, Marthas, and so forth. Right, what if we add one more control to limit us to Kansas City. Now we have a “Structured Search”.

You have probably thought of a still better or different way to find Mary Kay using a Structured Search, or maybe even, a combination of Structured Search and Free Search. This is Information Design – the search aspect of Information Design.

Let’s ask a polar question, what is the essential difference between Free Search and Structured Search? Answer is Capital Cost. It will always cost less, even much less, to setup a Free Search. But what about Operational Cost. If employees are searching each other out all day, how much is saved by providing a quick and certain search method? How much is saved by shipping the printer to the right Mary Kay?

Structured Searches cost more upfront because someone has to imagine them, organize a database, setup strict methods for adding, editing, and deleting from the database, and provide a set of controls for making the search. Not all of these costs are avoided by choosing Free Search, but many are.

It’s finally a User Interface decision involving cost, scalability, and accuracy. This is a favorite subject of mine. Call me for quick discussion or to arrange analysis of your search needs.

User Interface Design – Information Design and Design Evaluation

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

In some inner circles the terms “Information Design” has been around for a long time. There are even famous “information designers” such as Edward Tufte at Yale University, the author of Envisioning Information and possibly the inventor of the term.

So why am I inviting you into these inner circles? An information system known as the Internet has pushed its way into your space. You have a website and you may or may not be prepared to deal with anything called Information Design. Here is some help.

Tufte alone has written seven books touching this subject, so I will not presume to encapsulate it here. My goal is to alert you to the existence and depth of this field, while also providing the rudiments for evaluating Information Design in your business application, database application, or website.

Here are two websites by GORGES that show just what Information Design deals with. The first site, http://birdsandbayous.org, is so simple that information design is little more than not making basic mistakes or omissions. There are only a few “information points” and only a basic navigation is needed to reach these points and return from them. This information design is analogous to the chapter ordering in a very small book.

The Martha Stewart site, http://www.marthastewart.com, is on a different planet. Every graphic and text object on this home page is a link to something, and amazingly, it all makes sense. It is visually organized to lead the visitor comfortably through dense information.

Note further, that much of the home page information is layered on top of other information and the visitor is invited to interact with it – to engage.

So it is dense, multi-layered, diverse, and interactive.

Your website’s complexity probably lies somewhere between the Birds and Bayous website and Martha Stewart’s. What can you learn from these two sites to help you evaluate your website or work with your website designers? Here’s one thing:

Insist that when presenting a design to you the designer makes at least three systematic passes across the demo pages in some carefully ordered, slow-paced way.
• In the first pass you should be told both “how” and “why” the information design suits your information set.
• In the second pass you should be told both “how” and “why” the graphic design suits you information set, as well as “how” and “why” it is appropriate to your brand and your communication intention for each of the audiences you have identified.
• In the third pass the designer needs to explain how the graphic design and information designs reinforce each other.

For the best result, allow the designers to make the points above without interruption and then go through it all again in a question and answer format. Good designers seek good criticism.

Here’s one more information design evaluation thing:

Ask two or three innocents to do the “What do you see?” test. With the page hidden, tell them you are going to ask them what they see first. Show the page. Then ask what they see second. You will get variation from person to person, but not much. Do this for the home page and for several subordinate pages. Does the visual prioritizing match your message plan?

My next posting will be also about Information Design – searching for information.

User Interface Design (UX) – Checklist – Data Records

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

User Interface Design – Content Checklist – Data Records

When designing and critiquing Websites or Software the User Interface (UX) needs explicit and systematic attention. Designers and Clients need to use checklists and apply them in prescribed ways. Here is a small part of one of my Content Checklists. This applies to data presentations and forms.

A) When the number of the rows, also called records, in a page reaches more then XX, a pagination bar should appear above and below the list. It looks like this:

First  Previous  1  2  3  4  [5]  6  7  8  9  10  Next  Last  [optionally,
All]

You just need to click on the page number of where you want to go.

B) The page numbers must be easy to read and click on. The font size must be readable and there must be enough spacing between each number so that clicking on the number you want is faultless.

C) An appropriate number of rows is a complex decision. It depends on the content and the user’s need to compare data row-to-row. Typically it can be 10 or 25. The number of records is also a consideration.

D) In some cases it may be necessary to provide an option for showing “ALL” records, or even showing a page of records “Beginning with Record # XXX”.

E) Unless budget constraints are very tight, the records should be sortable by their header titles. It is important for the current sort order to persist while the various record set controls described above are changed.

What is the best way to manage the content of a website?

Monday, April 20th, 2009

So you have or are considering a website for your business, and know that you need to manage the content, but what is the best way to do so?screenshot_1

In the old days of the web, content management was done using the same people who programmed the site.  They would open up the right file, edit the content, and ftp the new file up to the web server.

These days, that process is slow and error-prone, and the management of your content should be done by the business owners, product managers, editors, or marketing personnel.

Use of a content management system (CMS) is imperative if your site is going to function as a quality business growth tool for you.  You need a CMS that is easy to use and always accessible.  Search engines and human visitors both are looking for fresh, relevant and updated content.

Big budget publishing companies have sophisticated work flow software to manage the development of their content, allow editors to review this content, and publishing editors to approve for release.

But what is the small website owner to do? At Gorges Web Sites, we have been delivering special-purpose content management systems for years now.  At first, we used our own CMS, affectionately named ‘GoGorges’, which is a linux- and php-based development framework and content management system that we steadily improved over many projects.

More recently, though, the open-source content management systems have really come of age.

On recent projects, we have used:

Each of these systems have pros and cons, and through experience we have learned which one is most suited for a particular set of business and publishing needs.

The great news is that the use of these content management systems has lowered the cost for delivery of a sophisticated website.  You can get more functionality for less $ than ever before!

If you’d like to learn more about how one of these content management systems can help your business and improve your search engine optimization rankings, then fill out our quick form for your free consultation and we’ll jump on a call to discuss.

Chris Grant has been building Internet web sites and commerce applications since 1994, pioneering early database-driven Web application and e-commerce projects. He has been instrumental in the construction of hundreds of Internet projects, large and small.